Fear Not Bangkok, These Tanks Are For Children’s Day (Not a Coup)

A soldier stands guard as anti-government protesters hang a large Thai national flag on the gate of the gymnasium where candidates are due to register for the upcoming election during a rally at the Thai-Japan youth stadium in Bangkok December 25, 2013.

The presence of the military hardware comes as anti-government forces aligned with the country’s ironically named Democrat Party continue to hold mass protests against elections. Demonstrators want to unseat Thailand’s popularly elected Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra in the hope of installing a vaguely defined “People’s Council.”

A large-scale rally aimed at shutting down the capital is set for Jan. 13, in what many analysts believe is a bid to force the military’s hand and prevent voters from heading to polls slated for Feb. 2. Yingluck’s Pheu Thai Party remains popular in the nation’s populous rice-farming northeast and is likely to win again at the ballot box.

While the Kingdom’s generals have remained neutral during this latest round of colored-coded political strife, the armed forces are notorious for meddling in national affairs. Since the end of absolute monarchist rule in the 1930s, there have been 18 coups and 23 junta governments in Thailand. But don’t worry, this latest display of military might is apparently all about the kids.